freebilly
ArboristSite Lurker
I recently purchased a "lightly" used Echo CS-590 from an older couple (still had the security tag stuck to the bottom). I took it home and put fresh 50:1 in the tank and fired it up. It popped right away but would only stay running past half throttle. Anything less than half and it would stall hard. When it died, I would have to reapply choke to fire it up again. Assuming the low jet was plugged, I cleaned the carb. It was spotless inside and diaphragms were soft, but I noticed the low speed needle had a very slight bend in it but didn't seem to affect the way it seated. Saw still only ran at WOT. Ended up pulling cylinder to reveal a piston that had deep scoring on the exhaust side and nearly melted rings, I assumed from running straight gas as these saws come with valve stops that don't allow them to be tuned lean. I was able to save the cylinder and after sanding with green scoth brite it only had very minor scoring below the exhaust port, all aluminum transfer was removed. The new OEM piston and rings slid into the cylinder smoothly with no snags. Saw was reassembled and fired up second pull. It was running much better now but still not idling and would only stay running in you held throttle past 50%. At WOT the saw 4-stroked appropriately. Backing the low needle out 3-4 turns seemed to allow the saw to idle. After running the saw in this condition for 1-2 minutes there is already scoring on the new piston. I'm thinking next step is pressure test? Assuming the saw was lean from an air leak for this small amount could that have scored the piston already? I'm hesitant to check for leaks with brake cleaner as it doesn't want to idle and I'm trying to avoid further piston damage. Attached is a photo of the new piston.
